Jacksonville Florida's largest city
#61
Posted 01 May 2005 - 10:46 PM
#62
Posted 02 May 2005 - 12:03 AM
#63
Posted 02 May 2005 - 12:06 AM
Quote
Reading comprehension, Hisma, reading comprehension.
#64
Posted 02 May 2005 - 12:18 AM
RiversideGator, on May 2 2005, 12:06 AM, said:
no I understood it, but with the exception of Flagler being one of the fastest growing counties percentage-wise, there seems to be more population growth in central & south florida. Jax is growing steadily, but I've never heard it mentioned as one of the fastest growing metros in the country. Not a bad thing either, since fast growth usually means more sprawl. I could be wrong tho... some stats would be nice.
#65
Posted 02 May 2005 - 09:19 AM
ranks largest US metro areas, 3 numbers are 2000, 2010 and 2025 population
Metropolitan Area 2000 Rank 2010 Rank 2025 Rank
New York--Northern New Jersey--Long Island, NY--NJ--CT--PA CMSA 21,199,900 1 22,140,500 1 24,319,900 1
Los Angeles--Riverside--Orange County, CA CMSA 16,373,600 2 18,886,900 2 24,196,300 2
San Francisco--Oakland--San Jose, CA CMSA 7,039,400 5 8,111,800 5 10,377,400 3
Chicago--Gary--Kenosha, IL--IN--WI CMSA 9,157,500 3 9,630,300 3 10,297,400 4
Washington--Baltimore, DC--MD--VA--WV CMSA 7,608,100 4 8,292,900 4 9,300,000 5
Dallas--Fort Worth, TX CMSA 5,221,800 9 6,099,800 8 7,465,400 6
Philadelphia--Wilmington--Atlantic City, PA--NJ--DE--MD CMSA 6,188,500 6 6,362,400 6 6,680,300 7
Boston--Worcester--Lawrence, MA--NH--ME--CT CMSA 5,819,100 7 6,119,200 7 6,611,700 8
Houston--Galveston--Brazoria, TX CMSA 4,669,600 10 5,365,200 10 6,447,100 9
Detroit--Ann Arbor--Flint, MI CMSA 5,456,400 8 5,525,600 9 5,627,900 10
Atlanta, GA MSA 4,112,200 11 4,765,400 11 5,510,400 11
Miami--Fort Lauderdale, FL CMSA 3,876,400 12 4,384,200 12 5,167,100 12
Seattle--Tacoma--Bremerton, WA CMSA 3,554,800 13 4,012,600 13 4,670,800 13
Phoenix--Mesa, AZ MSA 3,251,900 14 3,785,000 14 4,445,400 14
San Diego, CA MSA 2,813,800 17 3,244,700 15 4,155,000 15
Minneapolis--St. Paul, MN--WI MSA 2,968,800 15 3,214,900 16 3,492,300 16
Denver--Boulder--Greeley, CO CMSA 2,581,500 19 2,878,900 18 3,210,200 17
Sacramento--Yolo, CA CMSA 1,796,900 24 2,227,700 23 3,137,700 18
Portland--Salem, OR--WA CMSA 2,265,200 22 2,621,500 21 3,122,900 19
Cleveland--Akron, OH CMSA 2,945,800 16 2,978,100 17 3,018,400 20
Tampa--St. Petersburg--Clearwater, FL MSA 2,396,000 20 2,639,600 20 3,015,200 21
St. Louis, MO--IL MSA 2,603,600 18 2,666,100 19 2,766,300 22
Orlando, FL MSA 1,644,600 27 1,956,300 25 2,436,800 23
Pittsburgh, PA MSA 2,358,700 21 2,343,900 22 2,314,900 24
Las Vegas, NV--AZ MSA 1,563,300 31 1,890,500 27 2,253,400 25
Cincinnati--Hamilton, OH--KY--IN CMSA 1,979,200 23 2,051,700 24 2,124,000 26
Kansas City, MO--KS MSA 1,776,100 25 1,918,500 26 2,101,400 27
San Antonio, TX MSA 1,592,400 29 1,790,800 28 2,099,300 28
Austin--San Marcos, TX MSA 1,249,800 37 1,548,900 34 2,014,100 29
Charlotte--Gastonia--Rock Hill, NC--SC MSA 1,499,300 33 1,696,800 31 1,923,000 30
Indianapolis, IN MSA 1,607,500 28 1,720,100 30 1,820,800 31
Milwaukee--Racine, WI CMSA 1,689,600 26 1,735,300 29 1,784,700 32
Norfolk--Virginia Beach--Newport News, VA--NC MSA 1,569,500 30 1,646,900 32 1,739,600 33
Columbus, OH MSA 1,540,200 32 1,613,100 33 1,704,200 34
Salt Lake City--Ogden, UT MSA 1,333,900 35 1,507,000 35 1,684,700 35
West Palm Beach--Boca Raton, FL MSA 1,131,200 44 1,330,000 40 1,636,400 36
Fresno, CA MSA 922,500 53 1,150,300 47 1,631,400 37
Raleigh--Durham--Chapel Hill, NC MSA 1,187,900 40 1,371,100 38 1,568,600 38
Nashville, TN MSA 1,231,300 38 1,386,400 37 1,538,800 39
New Orleans, LA MSA 1,337,700 34 1,393,600 36 1,488,400 40
Greensboro--Winston-Salem--High Point, NC MSA 1,251,500 36 1,362,400 39 1,481,900 41
Jacksonville, FL MSA 1,100,500
#66
Posted 02 May 2005 - 09:39 AM
My estimates are:
2010 - 1,450,000
2025 - 2,050,000
#67
Posted 02 May 2005 - 10:02 AM
As to the city of Jacksonville, between 2000 and 2003, we were the 5th fastest growing city in the South at 5.2% (ahead of Orlando, Tampa, Charlotte, Atlanta, Houston, Dallas, and Nashville). See http://www.urbanplan...?showtopic=7841
And, as to the overall metro area, Jacksonville grew at the rate of 21.4% between 1990 and 2000 and the rate of 11.3% from 2000 to July 1, 2004 (see http://www.census.go...hc-t3/tab03.txt and http://www.census.go...2004-03-12.csv)
Finally, I do not support sprawl either, so I would point out that downtown Jacksonville is more developed than some larger cities and has a lot of projects in the pipeline. See http://www.urbanplan...topic=9311&st=0
So, while Jacksonville is not growing too fast like Vegas or Orlando, we have healthy growth and better than most metro areas. The bottom line is Jacksonville is hardly "dead" and that was an absurd statement not supported by the facts.
#68
Posted 02 May 2005 - 10:25 AM
#69
Posted 02 May 2005 - 03:05 PM
#70
Posted 03 May 2005 - 12:02 PM
#71
Posted 13 December 2007 - 08:08 PM
Aessotariq, on Jan 5 2005, 03:36 PM, said:
About the next-nearest type of entity in the US is the Portland area's regional government it calls "Metro", which covers the three major counties of the Portland area. It handles issues like transportation, environmental protection, recycling, and growth management.
I'm glad you brought up the fire issue, because this one just ticks me off. Broward's system is totally fragmented: 99% incorporated, 30+ cities, almost each one with its own fire department (and some contract to the County), which will only respond inside the city limits, and pockets of unincorporated areas that are miles from the nearest county fire station. Sometimes county fire trucks have have to drive from miles away through two or three different cities to get to their service areas, when a local city fire station might be a few blocks away. In Dade this would not have happened, nor in Jacksonville.
A novel idea just happened recently. The Broward County Commision recently transferred its fire-rescue department to the Broward Sheriff's Office. BSO has had good negotiating experience in getting cities to contract with them for police services (thereby not having to lay off their force), so in assuming fire-rescue operations they can increase their service area and come up with interlocal agreements for mutual assistance. Come to think of it, I can't think of another sheriff's office that does both policing and fire-rescue.
Wow, things have changed a lot. I don't remember the rivalry being that intense in the days of Linda Chapin (Orange County Chairman) and Glenda Hood (Orlando Mayor).
#72
Posted 13 December 2007 - 08:14 PM
thelakelander, on Jan 10 2005, 03:53 PM, said:
Fort Lauderdale (Broward County), on the other hand is almost twice the size of Duval County in population, so I'd expect them to have more. However, for all the entertainment they have in Broward, what Jax does have over them, is a large collection architecturally distinct urban neighborhoods.
#73
Posted 13 December 2007 - 08:31 PM
asonj23, on May 2 2005, 04:05 PM, said:
#74
Posted 14 December 2007 - 06:06 AM
jaxboro, on Dec 13 2007, 09:54 PM, said:
#75
Posted 14 December 2007 - 08:52 AM
metrowester, on Dec 13 2007, 09:14 PM, said:
jaxboro is correct, Jax is FL's biggest city and b/c of city/county consolidation probably always will be. Most of the other big cities in FL are small in land size and thus smaller in pop. This all of course is referring to CITY size and not METRO size..there is a big difference between the two. IMHO the next big metro to emerge in FL will be the Ft. Myers-Naples area and not S/B as much.
Quote
Four of the top 100 fastest growing counties in the USA are in NFL........Saint Johns, Clay, Wakulla and Walton. Flagler IS the fastest growing county in the USA...which is in the blurry area where NFL meets CFL. So I think the growth you wish for NFL is already here.
#76
Posted 14 December 2007 - 08:10 PM
poonther, on Dec 14 2007, 09:52 AM, said:
jaxboro is correct, Jax is FL's biggest city and b/c of city/county consolidation probably always will be. Most of the other big cities in FL are small in land size and thus smaller in pop. This all of course is referring to CITY size and not METRO size..there is a big difference between the two. IMHO the next big metro to emerge in FL will be the Ft. Myers-Naples area and not S/B as much.
Four of the top 100 fastest growing counties in the USA are in NFL........Saint Johns, Clay, Wakulla and Walton. Flagler IS the fastest growing county in the USA...which is in the blurry area where NFL meets CFL. So I think the growth you wish for NFL is already here.
#77
Posted 17 December 2007 - 10:53 AM
Orlandoans would see similarities to College Park, only older and more urban in makeup.
#78
Posted 18 December 2007 - 09:39 PM
johnatl, on Dec 17 2007, 11:53 AM, said:
Orlandoans would see similarities to College Park, only older and more urban in makeup.
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